Minister 'concerned' about Iranian terrorist cells in Canada after U.S. airstrikes
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says she's deeply concerned about foreign interference by Iran's regime and the possibility of Tehran activating terrorist sleeper cells on Canadian soil after U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Anand was asked about a Globe and Mail report quoting former Liberal justice minister Irwin Cotler, who warned Iran could use these cells to commit acts of violence in Canada against critics of Iran's regime like himself.
"In addition to Mr. Cotler's remarks, we are very concerned about foreign interference including the types that were highlighted by him," Anand told Canadian media while in the Hague for the NATO summit.
"And we're very concerned about the Iranian regime, generally speaking."
Cotler, a human-rights advocate, revealed last year he was under police protection for his own safety. He said the RCMP told him it thwarted a plot by agents of Iran's regime to assassinate him.
WATCH |
In the U.S., FBI officials are on high alert for Iranian sleeper cells made up of terrorists or spies who often go undetected, living normal lives in Western countries until they are called on for service, CBS News reported.
Iran sent private messages to the U.S. President Donald Trump ahead of his Saturday strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities warning that they would respond with terrorist attacks in the U.S. carried out by sleeper cells in the country, NBC reported.
The Department of Homeland Security issued a national terrorism advisory on Sunday telling the public that if Iran's leadership called for retaliation, the likelihood would increase that violent extremists could independently mobilize to commit violence.
Former Canadian national security analyst Stephanie Carvin says Canadians shouldn't panic because the terrorism threat level hasn't changed in Canada and Iran has signalled it wants to de-escalate.
"I'm not sure what purpose would be served at this time by conducting a violent extremist attack or some kind of sabotage campaign, if in fact, they are looking for some kind of cessation of hostilities," said Carvin, who is an associate professor at Carleton University.
But Carvin says there is concern in the intelligence community that threat actors affiliated with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) could be living in Canada with some kind of cover story while working on behalf of the Iranian government — or with the ability to do so.
She warns these threat actors often aren't "sleeping," because even if they're not involved in an active plot, they're still often involved in threat-related activity. Those activities include money transfers, espionage, transnational repression, terrorist activity or sabotage campaigns against targets in Canada, she said.
"The idea that they're just somehow dormant I think is very wrong," she said. "These individuals are trained to engage in numerous activities."
When asked what action the government is taking to protect Canadians from any potential Iranian terrorism, Anand said Canada listed the IRGC as a terrorist organization last year and cut diplomatic ties over a decade ago.
"We will continue to take any possibility of foreign interference extremely seriously, and that is underscored by the work that we will advocate for here at NATO, as well as the work that we were doing at the G7," Anand said.
Anand also said she had an "unprecedented call" with her Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi on Saturday before the U.S. airstrikes. Her office believes it's the first call of its kind since François-Philippe Champagne did so years ago. He held the foreign affairs portfolio until January 2021.On that call, Anand said she urged Iran to allow Canadians to leave the country safely, de-escalate the conflict with Israel and return to the negotiating table. She also reaffirmed that Canada is still seeking accountability for Iran's downing of Flight PS752 that killed 55 Canadians and 30 permanent residents in 2020, she said.
Lawyer Kaveh Shahrooz says his concern over Iranian sleeper cells in Canada is "certainly heightened now" and he is "more alert than ever."
He's also a human rights activist who is critical of Iran's regime and says he's reported threats and being monitored to Canadian authorities before.
He's concerned Iran's regime could try to send a message to its critics abroad including in Canada to let them "know that it remains in charge."
"Iran's regime has been humiliated internationally," he said. "It's been defeated militarily. And so I think it's looking for different ways of asserting its own power and dominance to some extent against the West."
WATCH
Vancouver human rights lawyer Mojdeh Shahriari is the co-founder of StopIRGC, a grassroots group that tracks suspected Iranian regime members in Canada. She says they have passed on more than 90 names to national security agencies to investigate since 2022.
She fears that more senior Iranian officials will flee Iran because of the conflict with Israel and seek safe haven in Canada. She says there are already hundreds of regime affiliates and IRGC members she believes have settled in Canada. She calls this a "slow-moving monster" that's only going to speed up.
"My concern is as the regime weakens, they are going to use Canada as their future home more and more," she said. "This has already happened. It's going to accelerate."
After years of pressure to act, in 2022 the federal government designated the Islamic Republic of Iran as a regime that engaged in terrorism and systemic and gross human rights violations under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. That designation made some Iranian regime members inadmissible to Canada.
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) says it has cancelled the visas of more than 130 suspected senior Iranian regime members trying to come to Canada since the 2022 designation.
WATCH | :
To date, out of the 20 people CBSA reported inadmissible to Canada for being a senior official in the Iranian regime, only one has been removed from the country. Three people in total have been issued deportation letters after Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada rulings.
Majid Iranmanesh was one of the senior Iranian officials given a deportation order last year. A transcript of the Immigration and Refugee Board's hearing said Iranmanesh was a director-general in the vice-presidency of information and technology, just a few levels away from Iran's president. The board concluded he fell within the top 50 per cent of the hierarchy of the Iranian regime, the transcript said.
The board also expelled Seyed Salman Samani, Iran's former deputy interior minister, from Canada, the Immigration Refugee Board says.
Afshin Pirnoon, a former director general in Iran's roads ministry, is also facing an Immigration and Refugee Board hearing after the CBSA caught him living in Canada and claimed he was a senior official with Iran's regime.
Six other cases are ongoing. CBSA would not provide the identity of the individuals citing privacy concerns.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Sees Limited Damage to Iran Atomic Sites as UN Watchdog Urges Inspections
(Bloomberg) -- US President Donald Trump disputed an intelligence report that found the airstrikes he ordered on Iran had only a limited impact on its nuclear program, even though the assessment came from the Pentagon. Bezos Wedding Draws Protests, Soul-Searching Over Tourism in Venice US Renters Face Storm of Rising Costs US State Budget Wounds Intensify From Trump, DOGE Policy Shifts Commuters Are Caught in Johannesburg's Taxi Feuds as Transit Lags 'The nuclear sites in Iran are completely destroyed,' Trump said on Truth Social. He said CNN and the New York Times, which first reported the intelligence findings on Tuesday, 'have teamed up in an attempt to demean one of the most successful military strikes in history.' The assessment from the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency said the bombing on June 22 likely didn't cripple the core components of Iran's program below ground, including its centrifuges, according to people familiar with its contents. The findings are in line with open-source satellite imagery that shows new craters, possible collapsed tunnel entrances and holes on top of a mountain ridge but no conclusive evidence the attack breached the most heavily protected underground facilities. Trump had said the strikes — on atomic sites at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan — 'totally obliterated' their targets, and dismissed reports casting doubt on the claim. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt posted on X Tuesday that the intelligence finding of limited impact was 'flat-out wrong.' Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy for the Middle East, appeared on Fox News Tuesday night and described the reports as 'completely preposterous.' The head of Israel's military, Eyal Zamir, late on Tuesday said the assaults on Iran had set back its nuclear and missile projects by years. Still, the Pentagon assessment was backed up to some extent by the International Atomic Energy Agency. It's chief, Rafael Grossi, told Fox News that while Iran's atomic program 'has been set back significantly,' it's hard to specify whether that means months or years. Trump brokered a ceasefire to end the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran that appeared to be holding early Wednesday. The president had lashed out at both countries Tuesday, and particularly Israel, over what he said were early violations of the truce. Both nations have said they'll honor the ceasefire provided their enemy does the same. The de-escalation triggered a slump in oil prices — erasing almost all of its increase since the conflict broke out. Still, the ceasefire remains fragile as the focus shifts back to nuclear diplomacy. A stated goal of the American and Israeli strikes was to destroy Iran's ability to develop a nuclear weapon, adding urgency to assessments of how much damage was done. Witkoff, who told Fox would be almost impossible for Iran to resurrect its nuclear program, said he was already speaking with the country's officials about restarting formal negotiations. The talks so far have been promising, he said. The IAEA's Grossi said inspections by the United Nations atomic watchdog should resume 'as soon as possible' to determine what's happened to Iran's stocks of uranium enriched to 60% levels, not far short of the 90% required to build a bomb. The IAEA says it last verified those inventories a few days before Israel's attacks on Iran started on June 13, and their whereabouts is now unknown. The DIA's report found considerable damage on the surface at the nuclear sites, with the US strikes likely to have set Iran's program back by several months to as much as a year, according to a person briefed on the report's contents. The assessment has been shared with House and Senate leadership. Before the strikes, Trump had said Iran was 'weeks away' from having a nuclear bomb, though some experts and US intelligence estimates said it could take months or years for the nation to develop a weapon. The US strikes involved dropping more than a dozen 30,000-pound so-called bunker-buster bombs on Iranian nuclear sites, their first use in combat, according to the Pentagon. Tomahawk missiles were also fired from a US Ohio-class submarine in the Arabian Sea. Before Israel's attack on Iran, the US had held five rounds of negotiations with the Islamic Republic, seeking a diplomatic solution to concerns over its nuclear program — effectively a replacement for the 2015 nuclear deal that Trump abandoned during his first term. An agreement hadn't been reached, though a sixth round was scheduled before the Israeli missiles led to Iran canceling it. Tehran has insisted on its rights under international law to enrich uranium for civilian purposes such as fueling nuclear power plants. In calls with regional counterparts reported by state media on Tuesday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian appeared to reiterate that stance. 'The Islamic Republic of Iran is solely pursuing its legitimate rights and has no ambitions beyond that,' he told UAE officials. In Iran, 606 people were killed by Israeli strikes, according to the government. Israeli emergency services said 28 people were killed by Iranian missiles, including four on Tuesday morning just as the truce was about to start. Israeli authorities said Tuesday that wartime safety directives had been lifted. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the nation that immediate threats from Iran's nuclear program and ballistic missiles had been eliminated — though his military chief, Zamir, cautioned that 'the campaign against Iran is not over.' --With assistance from Akayla Gardner, Maeve Sheehey, Erik Wasson, Courtney McBride and Rosalind Mathieson. Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push Luxury Counterfeiters Keep Outsmarting the Makers of $10,000 Handbags Ken Griffin on Trump, Harvard and Why Novice Investors Won't Beat the Pros Is Mark Cuban the Loudmouth Billionaire that Democrats Need for 2028? Can 'MAMUWT' Be to Musk What 'TACO' Is to Trump? ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Babcock hails ‘new era of defence' as global threats prompt greater spending
Defence giant Babcock International has hailed a 'new era for defence' with rising global threats prompting governments around the world to strengthen spending, especially on the burgeoning nuclear sector. The London-listed company reported higher profits and raised its financial outlook. It generated an operating profit of £364 million in the year to the end of March, 51% higher than the previous year. Revenues grew by 11% to £4.8 billion, with particularly strong growth in the nuclear and marine sectors. It also said it was now expecting to meet its target underlying operating margin in the next financial year – one year earlier than it previously thought. Babcock maintains the UK's fleet of submarines, and also provides engineering support across the marine, nuclear, land and aviation sectors. UK defence spending made up nearly two-thirds of the group's sales last year, but it also operates in countries including Australia, Canada, France, and Ukraine. The company told investors that rising global threats and ongoing insecurity had contributed to governments across all its markets strengthening their stance on defence and security. This was set to drive significant spending and investment, particularly in the civil nuclear sector for the foreseeable future. It also highlighted the UK Government's renewed commitment to defence spending, with the Prime Minister earlier this month committing to spend 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) on national security. On Wednesday, it was announced that the UK is set to buy a fleet of new fighter jets capable of carrying nuclear weapons, with Sir Keir Starmer saying the country can 'no longer take peace for granted'. 'This is a new era for defence,' Babcock's chief executive David Lockwood said on Wednesday. 'There is increasing recognition of the need to invest in defence capability and energy security, both to safeguard populations and to drive economic growth.' Babcock also announced the launch of a £200 million share buyback programme, which will take place over the course of the 2026 financial year. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Donald Trump Makes ‘Super' Awkward Gaffe While Ranting About Iran
President Donald Trump was ridiculed online for a stormy slip-up during an exchange with a reporter aboard Air Force One on Tuesday. Asked about concerns over possible Iranian sleeper cell attacks in the United States following his decision to bomb the country, Trump pivoted to slamming his predecessor, former President Joe Biden ― but referred to 'supercells' thunderstorms instead. 'Biden let a lot of supercells into the United States,' Trump fumed. 'He was an incompetent president. He had no idea what he was doing. It was gross incompetence. Among everything else, he let a lot of supercells in, many from Iran. But hopefully we'll take care of them. What Biden did to this country should never be forgotten.' Trump: "Biden let a lot of super cells in, many from Iran. But hopefully we'll take care of them." (The term he was looking for is "sleeper cells") — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 24, 2025 The gaffe predictably went viral: Trump called sleeper cells, super cellsHe thinks he invented the words 'groceries' and 'equalize.'He called for world peace then posted a video to the tune of bomb IranBut he identified the elephant on a dementia test so I guess he's a god damn genius — Kelly D 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇨🇦🇬🇱 (@KellDA) June 25, 2025 He can fix Super Cells with his Sharpie. — wjmalik@ (@wjmalik) June 24, 2025 Trump's brain is just wind, noise, and rotating nonsense.A super cell of disinformation. — Nikos Unity (@nikosunity) June 24, 2025 Trump: "Biden let a lot of super cells in, many from Iran. But hopefully we'll take care of them." He's just so pathetic. — Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) June 24, 2025 Super cells? Like thunderstorms? Do I have to been on the lookout for twisters walking down the street now? — Juice (@TheJuiceBoxGuy) June 24, 2025 A confused Trump refers to "super" cells instead of "sleeper" cells — FactPost (@factpostnews) June 24, 2025 Trump Admin Slammed For Backing 'Downright Sadistic And Inhumane' Plan Marjorie Taylor Greene Flips Out Over 'Dirty Rumors' About Her And Trump Kayleigh McEnany's 'Go Viral' Dare Boosting Trump Ends In Mockery From 'Real Fear' To Heartbreak: GOP-Led Campaign Spotlights How Trump Is Wrecking Lives